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1,474 result(s) for "Pedersen, Henrik"
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A new species of Dendrobium sect. Crinifera (Dendrobieae) from Thailand
A new species of Dendrobium sect. Crinifera is described from Thailand. The late Peter O’Byrne is appropriately credited for his important preparatory work for our study and for coining the name of the new species, D. krabiense. Apparently endemic to southern Thailand, D. krabiense is similar to D. pardalinum but differs in the lip mid-lobe being distinctly clawed and in the lip ornaments only consisting of two lateral keels that extend from near lip base to claw of mid-lobe. Dendrobium krabiense is also similar to D. phuketense but differs in having larger, spotted flowers with a proportionally longer mentum. The material here referred to D. krabiense was previously misidentified as Flickingeria pallens (now considered a synonym of D. pardalinum).
A New Species of Crepidium (Orchidaceae) from Thailand
While preparing an account of Crepidium (Orchidaceae) for Flora of Thailand, a new species was discovered on limestone hills in peninsular Thailand; it is described here as Crepidium falcifolium. It has previously been collected and identified as C. godefroyi, but is more similar to C. khasianum.Wedemonstrate that the new species differs from either in both vegetative and floral characters.Adetailed description and illustrations are provided together with notes on taxonomy, habitat requirements, and conservation status.
Simplex and multiplex CRISPR/Cas9‐mediated knockout of grain protease inhibitors in model and commercial barley improves hydrolysis of barley and soy storage proteins
Summary Anti‐nutritional factors in plant seeds diminish the utilization of nutrients in feed and food. Among these, protease inhibitors inhibit protein degradation by exogenous proteases during digestion. Through conventional and selection‐gene‐free genome editing using ovules as explants, we used simplex and multiplex CRISPR/Cas9 for studying the impact of chymotrypsin inhibitor CI‐1A, CI‐1B and CI‐2, Bowman‐Birk trypsin inhibitor, Serpin‐Z4, and barley ɑ‐amylase/subtilisin inhibitor on barley and soybean storage protein degradation. Mutants were generated in the commercial cultivar Stairway, having a high level of protease inhibition, and the barley model cultivar Golden Promise, having a lower inhibition level. In Golden Promise, all individual knockouts decreased the inhibition of the three proteases α‐chymotrypsin, trypsin and the commercial feed protease Ronozyme ProAct significantly. The triple knockout of all chymotrypsin inhibitors further decreased the inhibition of α‐chymotrypsin and Ronozyme ProAct proteases. Degradations of recombinant barley storage proteins B‐ and C‐hordeins were significantly improved following mutagenesis. In Stairway, a single knockout of CI‐1A almost compares to the effect on the proteases achieved for the triple knockout in Golden promise, uncovering CI‐1A as the major protease inhibitor in that cultivar. The Stairway mutant demonstrated significantly improved degradation of recombinant barley hordeins and in the soybean storage proteins glycinin and β‐conglycinin. The results of this study provide insights into cereal protease inhibitor genes and their negative effects on the degradation of barley storage protein and the most important plant protein from soybeans. The study suggests a future focus on plant protease inhibitors as a major target for improving feed and food protein digestibility.
Middle school students’ experience of joy in different activities during physical education—a case study
Joy of movement is central in the physical education subject and has received more attention in the public debate and in research following the new Norwegian curriculum in 2020. There is a lack of quantitative studies that measure students joy of movement in activities in the subject—which this study addresses regarding the activities of dance, strength/endurance, play, football, and ball sport. Data collection was conducted using a questionnaire among 269 secondary school students in Mid-Norway. The results show that secondary school students generally experience joy of movement in most activities. Furthermore, the study shows that boys generally experience a higher degree of joy of movement than girls in all activities, except for dance, where girls report higher numbers. Ball sports stand out positively in terms of the experience of joy of movement, while the findings indicate a need for change in the teaching of dance. The findings of this study related to dance suggest that current dance teaching does not create joy of movement among boys and only limited joy of movement among girls. To achieve a change, there will be a need to increase teachers’ competence in dance in general, and in dance from youth culture in particular.
Low-Cost Hyperspectral Imaging in Macroalgae Monitoring
This study presents an approach to macroalgae monitoring using a cost-effective hyperspectral imaging (HSI) system and artificial intelligence (AI). Kelp beds are vital habitats and support nutrient cycling, making ongoing monitoring crucial amid environmental changes. HSI emerges as a powerful tool in this context, due to its ability to detect pigment-characteristic fingerprints that are often missed altogether by standard RGB cameras. Still, the high costs of these systems are a barrier to large-scale deployment for in situ monitoring. Here, we showcase the development of a cost-effective HSI setup that combines a GoPro camera with a continuous linear variable spectral bandpass filter. We empirically validate the operational capabilities through the analysis of two brown macroalgae, Fucus serratus and Fucus versiculosus, and two red macroalgae, Ceramium sp. and Vertebrata byssoides, in a controlled aquatic environment. Our HSI system successfully captured spectral information from the target species, which exhibit considerable similarity in morphology and spectral profile, making them difficult to differentiate using traditional RGB imaging. Using a one-dimensional convolutional neural network, we reached a high average classification precision, recall, and F1-score of 99.9%, 89.5%, and 94.4%, respectively, demonstrating the effectiveness of our custom low-cost HSI setup. This work paves the way to achieving large-scale and automated ecological monitoring.
Competitive co-diffusion as a route to enhanced step coverage in chemical vapor deposition
Semiconductor devices are constructed from stacks of materials with different electrical properties, making deposition of thin layers central in producing semiconductor chips. The shrinking of electronics has resulted in complex device architectures which require deposition into holes and recessed features. A key parameter for such deposition is the step coverage (SC), which is the ratio of the thickness of material at the bottom and at the top. Here, we show that adding a co-flow of a heavy inert gas affords a higher SC for deposition by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). By adding a co-flow of Xe to a CVD process for boron carbide using a single source precursor with a lower molecular mass than the atomic mass of Xe, the SC increased from 0.71 to 0.97 in a 10:1 aspect ratio feature. The concept was further validated by a longer deposition depth in lateral high aspect ratio structures. We suggest that competitive co-diffusion is a general route to conformal CVD. Chemical vapor deposition is used for forming thin layers of materials of various surfaces when making e.g., electronic devices. Here authors show how addition of a heavy inert gas can increase the thickness uniformity of the films on complex objects.
The Aarhus Chamber Campaign on Highly Oxygenated Organic Molecules and Aerosols (ACCHA): particle formation, organic acids, and dimer esters from α -pinene ozonolysis at different temperatures
Little is known about the effects of subzero temperatures on the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) from α-pinene. In the current work, ozone-initiated oxidation of α-pinene at initial concentrations of 10 and 50 ppb, respectively, is performed at temperatures of 20, 0, and −15 ∘C in the Aarhus University Research on Aerosol (AURA) smog chamber during the Aarhus Chamber Campaign on Highly Oxygenated Organic Molecules and Aerosols (ACCHA). Herein, we show how temperature influences the formation and chemical composition of α-pinene-derived SOA with a specific focus on the formation of organic acids and dimer esters. With respect to particle formation, the results show significant increase in particle-formation rates, particle number concentrations, and particle mass concentrations at low temperatures. In particular, the number concentrations of sub-10 nm particles were significantly increased at the lower 0 and −15 ∘C temperatures. Temperature also affects the chemical composition of formed SOA. Here, detailed offline chemical analyses show that organic acids contribute from 15 % to 30 % by mass, with highest contributions observed at the lowest temperatures, indicative of enhanced condensation of these semivolatile species. In comparison, a total of 30 identified dimer esters were seen to contribute between 4 % and 11 % to the total SOA mass. No significant differences in the chemical composition (i.e. organic acids and dimer esters) of the α-pinene-derived SOA particles are observed between experiments performed at 10 and 50 ppb initial α-pinene concentrations, thus suggesting a higher influence of reaction temperature compared to that of α-pinene loading on the SOA chemical composition. Interestingly, the effect of temperature on the formation of dimer esters differs between the individual species. The formation of less oxidized dimer esters – with oxygen-to-carbon ratio (O:C)<0.4 – is shown to increase at low temperatures, while the formation of the more oxidized species (O:C>0.4) is suppressed, consequently resulting in temperature-modulated composition of the α-pinene-derived SOA. Temperature ramping experiments exposing α-pinene-derived SOA to changing temperatures (heating and cooling) reveal that the chemical composition of the SOA with respect to dimer esters is governed almost solely by the temperature at which oxidization started and is insusceptible to subsequent changes in temperature. Similarly, the resulting SOA mass concentrations were found to be more influenced by the initial α-pinene oxidation temperatures, thus suggesting that the formation conditions to a large extent govern the type of SOA formed, rather than the conditions to which the SOA is later exposed. For the first time, we discuss the relation between the identified dimer ester and the highly oxygenated organic molecules (HOMs) measured by chemical ionization–atmospheric pressure interface–time-of-flight mass spectrometer (CI-APi-ToF) during the ACCHA experiments. We propose that, although very different in chemical structures and O:C ratios, many dimer esters and HOMs may be linked through similar RO2 reaction pathways and that dimer esters and HOMs merely represent two different fates of the RO2 radicals.
Higher Order Thorin–Bernstein Functions
We investigate subclasses of generalized Bernstein functions related to complete Bernstein and Thorin–Bernstein functions. Representations in terms of incomplete beta and gamma as well as hypergeometric functions are presented. Several special cases and examples are discussed.
Frequency of health care utilization in the year prior to completed suicide: A Danish nationwide matched comparative study
Suicide accounts for more than 800,000 annual deaths worldwide. Some of these deaths may be preventable by timely identification of individuals at risk and effective intervention. General practitioners (GPs) may have the potential to play an important role in this process. The present study aimed to assess the frequency of primary health care utilization in the year preceding suicide. Using Danish national registers, we identified all persons who died by suicide in Denmark from 1997 through 2013 and assessed the frequency of their primary care utilization and compared it with that of an age- and sex-matched reference group sampled from the background population. We identified 11,191 persons who died by suicide (males: 8,095, females: 3,096). Compared with the reference group (N = 55,955), a greater proportion attended general practice in the year before index date (83% vs. 76%). In the last month before index date, these figures were 32.0% and 19.4%, respectively, corresponding to a difference of 12.0 95% CI: (11.1; 12.9) percentage points after adjustment for demographic characteristics and physical comorbidity. Suicide cases had a higher GP attendance in every week in the year before suicide, but the difference increased specifically in the last four months. More than 30% attended the GP in the month before the suicide. This indicates that general practice could be a possible place to identify suicide cases and offer intervention. However, although this proportion represents a markedly higher GP attendance than seen in the reference group, almost 70% of those who died by suicide did not attend primary care in the month before the suicide. Our study suggests that it is important that the GPs have easy access to effective suicide prevention programs for patients at risk of suicide, and that persons with suicidal thoughts are encouraged to contact their GP.